The interdisciplinary contact with the cultural geography can be beneficial for Anthropology and Sociology. Par-ticular interest is granted to the territory concept, under-stood as the appropriate space valorised by a social group to assure its reproduction and the satisfaction of its vital necessities. This is a multi-scale conception that can be apprehended at different levels of the geographical scale. The geographers have also elaborated the landscape con-cept in a narrow relationship with that of territory, under-stood the former as a metonymic symbol and differentiat-ing component of the later. The culture constitutes a fundamental dimension of the territory since the appro-priation of the space does not only have an instrumental character but also a symbolic-expressive one. Understood in this manner, the territory constitutes the obligated frame-work for certain social phenomena here presented.

The interdisciplinary contact with the cultural geography can be beneficial for Anthropology and Sociology. Par-ticular interest is granted to the territory concept, under-stood as the appropriate space valorised by a social group to assure its reproduction and the satisfaction of its vital necessities. This is a multi-scale conception that can be apprehended at different levels of the geographical scale. The geographers have also elaborated the landscape con-cept in a narrow relationship with that of territory, under-stood the former as a metonymic symbol and differentiat-ing component of the later. The culture constitutes a fundamental dimension of the territory since the appro-priation of the space does not only have an instrumental character but also a symbolic-expressive one. Understood in this manner, the territory constitutes the obligated frame-work for certain social phenomena here presented.